In this volume the authors make an extremely valuable contribution to the psychiatric literature by thoroughly discussing and illustrating how to interview four types of difficult patients: patients who use symptoms to communicate their distress, patients who have psychotic communications, patients with cognitive impairments, and patients who engage in self-protective and deceptive behavior.

The text begins by suggesting that, rather than being wed to only one school of thought that professes to having all the answers about the nature of psychiatric disorders and how to interview patients, it makes more sense to realize that different approaches may work well with different groups of disorders. Accordingly, the Othmers suggest that patients who manifest their problems through "pseudoneurological, unexplained, somatic or psychological symptoms" should be interviewed differently than patients who are in their own world and are shutting out reality. Further, these two types of patients should be interviewed differently from the